Rob Lowe Shares How He Reconnected With His Wife After Becoming an Empty Nester

Lowe and Sheryl Berkoff have been married for 33 years, and have two sons together.
Rob Lowe Shares How He Reconnected With His Wife After Becoming an Empty Nester
Rob Lowe and his wife, Sheryl Berkoff, pose during the 59th Monte-Carlo Television Festival in Monaco on June 18, 2019. Valery Hache/AFP via Getty Images
Haika Mrema
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As Rob Lowe and his wife, Sheryl Berkoff, came to terms with their two adult sons being out of the house, they found a silver lining as they reignited the spark within their marriage.

During an appearance on “The Jennifer Hudson Show” on Monday, the “Wayne’s World” star said he was sad about becoming an empty nester until he viewed the milestone from a different perspective.

“Becoming one was actually super emotional for me,” he told singer and actress Jennifer Hudson. “I was so sad. ... [But] I love being an empty nester now.”

Lowe added that the departure of sons Matthew, 31, and John, 28, marked a new beginning.

“I was sad when they left, and I thought, this is the end of that relationship with your kids. It’s not. It’s just the beginning of a new chapter,” he said.

“The Outsiders” star has been married to Berkoff, a jewelry designer, for 33 years. Sitting across from Hudson, Lowe shared about the day he and his wife inconspicuously tied the knot.

“We didn’t want anybody to know about it. We didn’t want it to be in the papers. So we had it at a friend’s house and told people they were coming to a daytime luncheon with a wedding theme,” he recalled.

“And we kept the guest list really, really small. It was great, I loved it.”

Last year, Lowe revealed the keys to a lasting marriage on Bruce Bozzi’s “Table for Two” podcast.

“It’s all about who you choose,” he said. “Sheryl was and is my best friend. So if you marry for anything other than the fact that it’s your best friend, you’re at a disadvantage from the jump. Because that will sustain when the other stuff ebbs and flows.”

The 60-year-old actor also shared that he and Sheryl “keep the heat” in their relationship.

“By the way, that comes and goes, too. There are days, there are times when you’re just like, ‘Ahhh,’ and then all of a sudden you’re just wild for somebody. It’s one of the great human mysteries,” he said.

Lowe’s Career

Born in Charlottesville, Virginia, on March 17, 1964, Lowe grew up in Dayton, Ohio, where he got his first acting role as an errand boy in a “Sherlock Holmes” production at the Wright State University theater. In 1979, he made his television debut as Tony Flanagan in the ABC sitcom “A New Kind of Family.”

One of Lowe’s first leading roles was in the 1983 television film “Thursday’s Child,” in which he played a high school football player dealing with a critical illness. His performance earned him his first Golden Globe nomination.

Lowe received his big break that same year when he made his feature film debut as Sodapop Curtis in “The Outsiders.”

Lowe went on to star in more films, such as “The Hotel New Hampshire” (1984), “St. Elmo’s Fire” (1985), and “About Last Night” (1986) with Demi Moore. Lowe received his second Gloden Globe nomination for his role in “Square Dance” (1987).

From 1999 to 2003, Lowe played White House communications director Sam Seaborn in the political drama “The West Wing,” which earned him two more Golden Globe nominations and a Primetime Emmy Award nomination.

Lowe’s most recent projects include the television series “Unstable” and “9-1-1: Lone Star.”

Haika Mrema
Haika Mrema
Author
Haika Mrema is a freelance entertainment reporter for The Epoch Times. She is an experienced writer and has covered entertainment and higher-education content for platforms such as Campus Reform and Media Research Center. She holds a B.B.A. from Baylor University where she majored in marketing.